Saudi petition seeks ‘full’ rights for women

The petition calls for the kingdom’s women to be treated “as a full citizen, and decide an age where she will be an adult and will be responsible for her own acts”, said campaigner Aziza Al-Yousef of Riyadh.

The retired university professor told AFP that she tried unsuccessfully to deliver the petition containing 14,700 names to the Royal Court on Monday. The activists will now send it by mail as requested.

Saudi Arabia has some of the world’s tightest restrictions on women, and is the only country where they are not allowed to drive.

Under the guardianship system a male family member, normally the father, husband or brother, must grant permission for a woman’s study, travel and other activities.

Activists say that even female prisoners have to be received by the guardian upon their release, meaning that some have to languish in jail or a shelter beyond their sentences if the man does not want to accept them.

“We are suffering from this guardianship system,” said Nassima al-Sadah, an activist in Eastern Province.

The campaign is an outgrowth of a Twitter hashtag in Arabic that started more than two months ago calling for an end to guardianship.

“This momentum got very high after the hashtag was created” and following a report by the New York-based Human Rights Watch, Yousef said.

“Saudi Arabia’s male guardianship system remains the most significant impediment to women’s rights in the country despite limited reforms over the last decade,” the watchdog said.

Although the government no longer requires guardian permission for women to work, Human Rights Watch said many employers still demand guardian consent in order to hire a woman.

‘Highly educated’ women

Some hospitals also require a guardian’s approval before carrying out medical procedures, it said.

Activists said that if they have open-minded male family members, getting their consent is not a problem — although the men still have to formally complete consent papers.

Yousef said many men endorsed the petition because they consider signing the consent forms a waste of time. Activists claim that Islam does not require men to control women, and male newspaper columnist Abdullah Al-Alweet agreed.

“How can an illiterate father become the guardian of a highly educated woman?” he asked in a Saudi Gazette column on Monday.

Sadah said “it’s a government system” which only came into effect about 30 years ago, and which some women get around by paying for permission from their guardians.

Activists said that ending guardianship will make it easier for women to work at a time when the kingdom wants to boost female employment. “We cannot do it with half of the society paralysed,” Yousef said.

Under the National Transformation Programme (NTP), which sets targets for the Vision, the proportion of women in the workforce should rise from 23 to 28 percent by 2020.

The jobless rate for Saudi women increased slightly last year to 33.8 percent, according to figures cited by the Jadwa Investment firm.

A slow expansion of women’s rights began under King Salman’s predecessor Abdullah, who named women to the Shura Council which advises the cabinet.

Last December, when women could vote and stand as candidates for the first time, at least 20 women were elected for the 2,106 contested council seats. There are roughly 10 million women and girls in Saudi Arabia.